![]() During these two years he had 51 matches with 45 wins, 4 losses and 2 tied matches. When Lane was in junior high school (7th & 8th grade), in Vernal, Utah he was very good in wrestling. Lane spent his first 14 years in Utah, doing chores on the dairy farm his parents owned, and later competing in various rodeo events. ![]() While rodeoing wasn't the way of life his parents exactly wanted for him, (especially the bulls!) they never discouraged him, and helped him whenever they could. Lane stayed on a bucking Shetland Pony to win first in bareback, took second in calf roping and rode a calf in the "bull riding" event to place third. Lane's first rodeo awards were won in 1974, when he was 10, at the "Little Buckaroos" Rodeos held in and around the Uintah Basin of UT. Before that, he had been competing on calves and steers. Frost says that they had been telling Lane the same thing, but of course he listened to Don! At the age of 15 Lane started to ride bulls on a regular basis. However, to the relief of his family, he met Don Gay around that time, and Don told Lane that he should just ride calves and steers until his bones were more fully developed. Lane started riding little dairy calves on the family dairy farm in Randlett, UT when he was 5 or 6. ![]() She admits to hoping he "would out-grow this bull riding thing." His mom made his first pair of chaps for him. Frost is fond of the memory of Lane awakening during the bull riding event, and he would cry when his parents stood up to leave early, If they returned to watch the bull riding he would quiet down. When Lane was killed in Cheyenne he was 25, he was 5' 11"and weighed 145 lbs Lane, at the early age of 5 months, was interested in the bull riding events at the rodeos his parents attended. Lane has an older sister, Robin, and a younger brother, Cody. Lane was born in the hospital at La Junta, Co., the closest hospital to Kim. However, Lanes Father Clyde was rodeoing at the time and Lane's mother, Elsie went to stay with her parents in Kim, Co., while she waited for Lane to arrive. At that time, his parents lived in Lapoint, Utah. Terry Frost: The Biography by Roger Bristow. Published by Lund Humphries, Farnham, UK, 2010. Terry Frost prints : A catalogue raisonné by Dominic Kemp. Published by Scolar Press, Aldershot, 1994. Terry Frost : A personal narrative by David Lewis. Abroad his work is in the collections of art galleries and museums in Australia, New Zealand, Israel, USA and Canada.īibliography: Terry Frost, Warm Frost: Featuring the work of Sir Terry Frost, RA by Alison Hodge. They can be seen in the ACGB, Bolton Art Gallery, Bournemouth & Poole College Collection, Cheltenham Art Gallery, Cornwall County Council, GAC, Fitzwilliam Museum, Gulbenkian Foundation, Hepworth Wakefield, Huddersfield Art Gallery, Jerwood Foundation, Leamington Spa Art Gallery, National Museum of Wales, Oldham Art Gallery, Peter Scott Gallery, Pier Arts Centre, Portsmouth Art Gallery, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Stirling University Art Collection, Swindon Art Gallery, Tate Gallery, University of Warwick Art Collection, Ulster Museum and the Victoria & Albert Museum in London. Frost's estate is handled by and exhibited at Beaux Arts Bath and Beaux Arts London and has also been exhibited at Belgrave Gallery, Austin Desmond Fine Art and at KHG.įrost’s work is in major public collections and galleries across the world including in the UK. Latterly many of his works were reproduced as limited edition prints and sold through outlets like CCA Galleries and the Curwen Gallery. He also exhibited across the UK and indeed on a world-wide basis. In a long and extensively fruitful career he showed at every major art societies in his adopted Cornwall including the STISA and the NSA. Frost taught variously at Leeds School of Art, Bath Academy, Corsham, Coventry Art College and Reading University and received a Knighthood in 1998. He was appointed Gregory Fellow at Leeds University, 1954-56. Ives in 1951 and for a time was a studio assistant to sculptor Barbara Hepworth. He did not paint his first abstract picture until 1949 and from then on his work became totally abstract and during the next decade was associated with the short-lived Constructionism movement. Ives, and that autumn began studying at Camberwell School of Arts & Crafts. In 1947 Frost held his first solo exhibition at G.R. After the cessation of hostilities in 1945 he began attending evening classes at Birmingham School of Art and the following year he relocated to Cornwall where he attended St. In the POW camp at Hohenfais, Bavaria, he met Adrian Heath who encouraged him to paint. He enlisted in the army in World War II in 1939 and after serving in Sudan, Abyssinia, Egypt and Crete he was taken prisoner-of-war in June 1941. Abstract painter and printmaker born Terence Ernest Manitou Frost in Leamington Spa, Warwickshire.
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